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Dr. Anina Rich Publications:
Journal articles (refereed):
Mattingley, J.B., Rich, A.N., Yelland, G. & Bradshaw, J.L. (2001). Unconscious priming eliminates automatic binding of colour and alphanumeric form in synaesthesia. Nature, 410, 580-582.
Rich, A.N. & Mattingley, J.B. (2002). Anomalous perception in synaesthesia: a cognitive neuroscience perspective. Nature Reviews Neuroscience, 3, 43-52.
Rich, A.N. & Mattingley, J.B. (2003). The effects of stimulus competition and voluntary attention on colour-graphemic synaesthesia. NeuroReport, 14, 1793-1798. [PDF]
Rich, A.N., Bradshaw, J.L. & Mattingley, J.B. (2005). A systematic, large-scale study of synaesthesia: implications for the role of early experience in lexical-colour associations. Cognition, 98, 53-84. [PDF]
Edquist, J., Rich, A.N., Brinkman, C. & Mattingley, J.B. (2006). Do synaesthetic colours act as unique features in visual search? Cortex, 42, 222-231. [PDF]
Mattingley, J.B., Payne, J.M., & Rich, A.N. (2006). Attentional load attenuates synaesthetic priming effects in grapheme-colour synaesthesia. Cortex, 42, 213-221. [PDF]
Book chapters (refereed):
Rich, A.N., Mattingley, J.B., Yelland, G., & Bradshaw, J.L. (1999). Conscious and non-conscious information processing in synaesthesia: a cognitive neuroscience perspective. In Proceedings of the Fifth Bienniel Australasian Cognitive Science Conference. C.Davis, T.van Gelder, R.Wales (Eds.). Causal Productions: Australia.
Mattingley, J.B. & Rich, A.N. (2004). Behavioural and brain correlates of multisensory experience in synaesthesia. In Handbook of Multisensory Integration, G.Calvert, C.Spence, B.Stein (Eds.), Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
Rich, A.N. & Mattingley, J.B. (2005). Can attention modulate colour-graphemic synaesthesia. In Synesthesia: Perspectives from Cognitive Neuroscience, L.C. Robertson & N. Sagiv (Eds.), New York: Oxford University Press.
Book review:
Rich, A.N. (in press). A union of the senses or a sense of union? [Review of the books A Union of the Senses and Synesthesia: Perspectives from Cognitive Neuroscience]. Cortex.
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